Texarkana Gazette

Israeli minister: U.S. warned Israel about annexing West Bank

- By Daniel Estrin

JERUSALEM—Israel’s defense minister said Monday the U.S. has notified Israel that imposing Israeli sovereignt­y over the West Bank would lead to an “immediate crisis” with the Trump administra­tion.

“We received a direct message—not an indirect message and not a hint—from the United States. Imposing Israeli sovereignt­y on Judea and Samaria would mean an immediate crisis with the new administra­tion,” Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said at the start of parliament’s foreign affairs and defense committee meeting. Judea and Samaria is the biblical term for the West Bank, land Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war and continues to occupy.

The defense minister was responding to a media interview with lawmaker Miki Zohar, of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party, in which he rejected the idea of a Palestinia­n state and advocated for a “one-state solution” in which Palestinia­ns would have Israeli citizenshi­p.

“The two-state solution is dead,” Zohar told i24NEWS, an Israeli TV channel. “What is left is a one-state solution with the Arabs here as, not as full citizenshi­p, because full citizenshi­p can let them to vote to the Knesset. They will get all of the rights like every citizen except voting for the Knesset,” the Israeli parliament.

“They will be able to vote and be elected in their city under administra­tive autonomy and under Israeli sovereignt­y and with complete security control,” Zohar added.

Lieberman said he received phone calls “from the entire world” about whether Zohar’s proposal reflected the Israeli government’s position. He said imposing Israeli sovereignt­y on the West Bank would mean Israel would be faced with the financial burden of providing Palestinia­ns with health care and other benefits. He called on the governing coalition to “clarify very clearly, there is no intention to impose Israeli sovereignt­y.”

In a striking departure from longtime American policy, President Donald Trump has not explicitly embraced a twostate solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, in which Israel would end its occupation of the West Bank and an independen­t Palestinia­n state would be establishe­d alongside Israel. Trump said last month he would support whatever solution is acceptable to both sides.

That has raised questions about what kind of agreement could be reached, and has led to calls by hard line members of Netanyahu’s Cabinet to give up on the idea of a Palestinia­n state and formally annex part or all of the West Bank to Israel. A single binational state could require Israel to grant citizenshi­p to millions Palestinia­ns under its control, threatenin­g its status as a Jewish-majority democracy.

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